Statistics say murder rates have dropped 30% as the probability of going to prison for murder has risen 53%. I believe they are dropping because it has become nearly impossible for many people to get away with it in the U.S. due to many technological advances.
I believe the reason why the death penalty has not been abolished I the U.S. is because of one question. Many anti-abolitionists ask "If your wife or child had been brutally murdered by someone would you want that person to die?" This is what keeps the law to abolish capital punishment from being passed.
Many people hesitate to endorse executions, yet when confronted by some blatant horrendous murder in their own country, they feel that the death penalty should be available in some instances. Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber who was sentenced to death in 1998, would be an example of such an "appropriate" death penalty case in most people's minds. National surveys conducted since 1936 ask people in the United States whether they favor the death penalty for a person convicted of murder. While support for executions has fluctuated, the majority of the people tend to favor the death penalty. In 1999, support was at 71 percent.
Meanwhile, courts continue to face the issue that only about 250 death sentences are handed out for the more than 18,000 murders that occur annually. How can this be done in a judicially fair manner? Policymakers, however, do not seem concerned with these legal matters. In recent years, federal and state lawmakers have made more crimes punishable by death. .
I think it is much more economical to use capital punishment rather than a life sentence. Our taxes have to pay for a murderer to live and eat. I don't think its right for someone to do that. It would save so much money if they just used the death penalty rather than support the criminal for his or her own life. .
Death penalties are not unusual anywhere in the world.